Self-protective behaviors of Thai village health volunteers in community engagement during a COVID-19 outbreak: interpretation using the health belief model
Self-protective behaviors of Thai village health volunteers in community engagement during a COVID-19 outbreak: interpretation using the health belief model
Background: village health volunteers (VHVs) engaging in community-based COVID-19 prevention and control measures played a key role in mitigating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Thailand. We conducted a cross-sectional questionnaire survey study to investigate factors affecting VHVs’ COVID-19 self-protective behaviors and social distancing in Songkhla Province during the first COVID-19 outbreak. Such information may help to understand how to support VHVs in future pandemics.
Methods: a total of 152 VHVs from 13 sub-districts participated in the study, completing a 54-item questionnaire based on the Health Belief Model (HBM). The questionnaire included items assessing susceptibility, severity, benefits, barriers, self-efficacy, social distancing, and self-protective behavior. Stepwise multiple regression analysis determined which aspects of the HBM could explain VHVs’ self-protective behavior.
Results: the VHV population sampled broadly reflected the main demographic characteristics of the local population, although VHVs were predominantly female. Self-protective behavior was significantly associated with VHVs’ role (higher perceived compliance for village leaders than non-leaders) but not with other demographic characteristics. Most VHVs reported high levels of self-efficacy (80.5%), adherence to social distancing measures (70.9%), and engagement in self-protective behavior (72.8%) against COVID-19. However, compliance with hand hygiene appeared to be suboptimal, suggesting room for improvement. Self-efficacy and perceived social distancing showed strong and moderate correlations with self-protective behavior against COVID-19 (r = 0.917, β = 0.819; and r = 0.561, β = 0.173 respectively; p < 0.001). The final HBM-based regression model accounted for 87.2% of the variance in VHVs’ self-protective behavior.
Conclusions: this study highlights the importance of VHVs’ self-efficacy for achieving self-protective behavior during a COVID-19 outbreak, and suggests that self-efficacy may help to overcome barriers that might otherwise hinder behaviors to mitigate against COVID-19. Policies that support self-efficacy should be implemented in any future pandemic, and steps to support VHVs with hand hygiene compliance and empower non-leaders to increase their self-protective behavior may also be helpful. Whilst the HBM provided a useful framework for interpretation, the final model was driven mainly by self-efficacy.
Community engagement, Health belief model, Self-efficacy, Self-protective behavior, Village health volunteers
Wongrith, Paleeratana
4449d18a-42f8-44eb-8a0a-215d4ed05bb4
Buakate, Phuwasin
1d07f90e-9a3d-48ac-9d29-c1587b69bbb6
Doylee, Lateefah
9d5a559e-9e6a-421d-8e5d-ecdee59a1ae8
Phonla, Naseeyah
717de400-5978-4825-aa9e-98036679d5dc
Dadras, Omid
eb959d83-26e9-408e-b543-f70503c78939
Frampton, Geoff
26c6163c-3428-45b8-b8b9-92091ff6c69f
Wongrith, Paleeratana
4449d18a-42f8-44eb-8a0a-215d4ed05bb4
Buakate, Phuwasin
1d07f90e-9a3d-48ac-9d29-c1587b69bbb6
Doylee, Lateefah
9d5a559e-9e6a-421d-8e5d-ecdee59a1ae8
Phonla, Naseeyah
717de400-5978-4825-aa9e-98036679d5dc
Dadras, Omid
eb959d83-26e9-408e-b543-f70503c78939
Frampton, Geoff
26c6163c-3428-45b8-b8b9-92091ff6c69f
Wongrith, Paleeratana, Buakate, Phuwasin, Doylee, Lateefah, Phonla, Naseeyah, Dadras, Omid and Frampton, Geoff
(2024)
Self-protective behaviors of Thai village health volunteers in community engagement during a COVID-19 outbreak: interpretation using the health belief model.
BMC Primary Care, 25 (1), [102].
(doi:10.1186/s12875-024-02346-z).
Abstract
Background: village health volunteers (VHVs) engaging in community-based COVID-19 prevention and control measures played a key role in mitigating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in Thailand. We conducted a cross-sectional questionnaire survey study to investigate factors affecting VHVs’ COVID-19 self-protective behaviors and social distancing in Songkhla Province during the first COVID-19 outbreak. Such information may help to understand how to support VHVs in future pandemics.
Methods: a total of 152 VHVs from 13 sub-districts participated in the study, completing a 54-item questionnaire based on the Health Belief Model (HBM). The questionnaire included items assessing susceptibility, severity, benefits, barriers, self-efficacy, social distancing, and self-protective behavior. Stepwise multiple regression analysis determined which aspects of the HBM could explain VHVs’ self-protective behavior.
Results: the VHV population sampled broadly reflected the main demographic characteristics of the local population, although VHVs were predominantly female. Self-protective behavior was significantly associated with VHVs’ role (higher perceived compliance for village leaders than non-leaders) but not with other demographic characteristics. Most VHVs reported high levels of self-efficacy (80.5%), adherence to social distancing measures (70.9%), and engagement in self-protective behavior (72.8%) against COVID-19. However, compliance with hand hygiene appeared to be suboptimal, suggesting room for improvement. Self-efficacy and perceived social distancing showed strong and moderate correlations with self-protective behavior against COVID-19 (r = 0.917, β = 0.819; and r = 0.561, β = 0.173 respectively; p < 0.001). The final HBM-based regression model accounted for 87.2% of the variance in VHVs’ self-protective behavior.
Conclusions: this study highlights the importance of VHVs’ self-efficacy for achieving self-protective behavior during a COVID-19 outbreak, and suggests that self-efficacy may help to overcome barriers that might otherwise hinder behaviors to mitigate against COVID-19. Policies that support self-efficacy should be implemented in any future pandemic, and steps to support VHVs with hand hygiene compliance and empower non-leaders to increase their self-protective behavior may also be helpful. Whilst the HBM provided a useful framework for interpretation, the final model was driven mainly by self-efficacy.
Text
s12875-024-02346-z
- Version of Record
More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 March 2024
Keywords:
Community engagement, Health belief model, Self-efficacy, Self-protective behavior, Village health volunteers
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492836
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492836
ISSN: 2731-4553
PURE UUID: 7e9b0532-b48b-4f4c-ae40-4d82568d9e76
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 15 Aug 2024 16:57
Last modified: 16 Aug 2024 01:33
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Paleeratana Wongrith
Author:
Phuwasin Buakate
Author:
Lateefah Doylee
Author:
Naseeyah Phonla
Author:
Omid Dadras
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics